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Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org> Reviewed-by: Dmitry Belyavskiy <beldmit@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Paul Dale <pauli@openssl.org> Reviewed-by: Tomas Mraz <tomas@openssl.org> (Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/18407)
297 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
297 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
SSL tests
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=========
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SSL testcases are configured in the `ssl-tests` directory.
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Each `ssl_*.cnf.in` file contains a number of test configurations. These files
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are used to generate testcases in the OpenSSL CONF format.
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The precise test output can be dependent on the library configuration. The test
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harness generates the output files on the fly.
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However, for verification, we also include checked-in configuration outputs
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corresponding to the default configuration. These testcases live in
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`test/ssl-tests/*.cnf` files.
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For more details, see `ssl-tests/01-simple.cnf.in` for an example.
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Configuring the test
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--------------------
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First, give your test a name. The names do not have to be unique.
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An example test input looks like this:
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{
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name => "test-default",
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server => { "CipherString" => "DEFAULT" },
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client => { "CipherString" => "DEFAULT" },
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test => { "ExpectedResult" => "Success" },
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}
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The test section supports the following options
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### Test mode
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* Method - the method to test. One of DTLS or TLS.
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* HandshakeMode - which handshake flavour to test:
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- Simple - plain handshake (default)
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- Resume - test resumption
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- RenegotiateServer - test server initiated renegotiation
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- RenegotiateClient - test client initiated renegotiation
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When HandshakeMode is Resume or Renegotiate, the original handshake is expected
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to succeed. All configured test expectations are verified against the second
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handshake.
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* ApplicationData - amount of application data bytes to send (integer, defaults
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to 256 bytes). Applies to both client and server. Application data is sent in
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64kB chunks (but limited by MaxFragmentSize and available parallelization, see
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below).
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* MaxFragmentSize - maximum send fragment size (integer, defaults to 512 in
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tests - see `SSL_CTX_set_max_send_fragment` for documentation). Applies to
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both client and server. Lowering the fragment size will split handshake and
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application data up between more `SSL_write` calls, thus allowing to exercise
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different code paths. In particular, if the buffer size (64kB) is at least
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four times as large as the maximum fragment, interleaved multi-buffer crypto
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implementations may be used on some platforms.
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### Test expectations
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* ExpectedResult - expected handshake outcome. One of
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- Success - handshake success
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- ServerFail - serverside handshake failure
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- ClientFail - clientside handshake failure
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- InternalError - some other error
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* ExpectedClientAlert, ExpectedServerAlert - expected alert. See
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`test/helpers/ssl_test_ctx.c` for known values. Note: the expected alert is currently
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matched against the _last_ received alert (i.e., a fatal alert or a
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`close_notify`). Warning alert expectations are not yet supported. (A warning
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alert will not be correctly matched, if followed by a `close_notify` or
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another alert.)
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* ExpectedProtocol - expected negotiated protocol. One of
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SSLv3, TLSv1, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2.
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* SessionTicketExpected - whether or not a session ticket is expected
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- Ignore - do not check for a session ticket (default)
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- Yes - a session ticket is expected
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- No - a session ticket is not expected
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* SessionIdExpected - whether or not a session id is expected
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- Ignore - do not check for a session id (default)
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- Yes - a session id is expected
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- No - a session id is not expected
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* ResumptionExpected - whether or not resumption is expected (Resume mode only)
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- Yes - resumed handshake
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- No - full handshake (default)
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* ExpectedNPNProtocol, ExpectedALPNProtocol - NPN and ALPN expectations.
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* ExpectedTmpKeyType - the expected algorithm or curve of server temp key
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* ExpectedServerCertType, ExpectedClientCertType - the expected algorithm or
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curve of server or client certificate
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* ExpectedServerSignHash, ExpectedClientSignHash - the expected
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signing hash used by server or client certificate
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* ExpectedServerSignType, ExpectedClientSignType - the expected
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signature type used by server or client when signing messages
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* ExpectedClientCANames - for client auth list of CA names the server must
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send. If this is "empty" the list is expected to be empty otherwise it
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is a file of certificates whose subject names form the list.
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* ExpectedServerCANames - list of CA names the client must send, TLS 1.3 only.
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If this is "empty" the list is expected to be empty otherwise it is a file
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of certificates whose subject names form the list.
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Configuring the client and server
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---------------------------------
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The client and server configurations can be any valid `SSL_CTX`
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configurations. For details, see the manpages for `SSL_CONF_cmd`.
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Give your configurations as a dictionary of CONF commands, e.g.
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server => {
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"CipherString" => "DEFAULT",
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"MinProtocol" => "TLSv1",
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}
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The following sections may optionally be defined:
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* server2 - this section configures a secondary context that is selected via the
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ServerName test option. This context is used whenever a ServerNameCallback is
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specified. If the server2 section is not present, then the configuration
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matches server.
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* resume_server - this section configures the client to resume its session
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against a different server. This context is used whenever HandshakeMode is
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Resume. If the resume_server section is not present, then the configuration
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matches server.
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* resume_client - this section configures the client to resume its session with
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a different configuration. In practice this may occur when, for example,
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upgraded clients reuse sessions persisted on disk. This context is used
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whenever HandshakeMode is Resume. If the resume_client section is not present,
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then the configuration matches client.
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### Configuring callbacks and additional options
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Additional handshake settings can be configured in the `extra` section of each
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client and server:
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client => {
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"CipherString" => "DEFAULT",
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extra => {
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"ServerName" => "server2",
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}
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}
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#### Supported client-side options
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* ClientVerifyCallback - the client's custom certificate verify callback.
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Used to test callback behaviour. One of
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- None - no custom callback (default)
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- AcceptAll - accepts all certificates.
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- RejectAll - rejects all certificates.
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* ServerName - the server the client should attempt to connect to. One of
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- None - do not use SNI (default)
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- server1 - the initial context
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- server2 - the secondary context
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- invalid - an unknown context
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* CTValidation - Certificate Transparency validation strategy. One of
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- None - no validation (default)
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- Permissive - SSL_CT_VALIDATION_PERMISSIVE
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- Strict - SSL_CT_VALIDATION_STRICT
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#### Supported server-side options
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* ServerNameCallback - the SNI switching callback to use
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- None - no callback (default)
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- IgnoreMismatch - continue the handshake on SNI mismatch
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- RejectMismatch - abort the handshake on SNI mismatch
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* BrokenSessionTicket - a special test case where the session ticket callback
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does not initialize crypto.
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- No (default)
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- Yes
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#### Mutually supported options
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* NPNProtocols, ALPNProtocols - NPN and ALPN settings. Server and client
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protocols can be specified as a comma-separated list, and a callback with the
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recommended behaviour will be installed automatically.
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* SRPUser, SRPPassword - SRP settings. For client, this is the SRP user to
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connect as; for server, this is a known SRP user.
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### Default server and client configurations
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The default server certificate and CA files are added to the configurations
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automatically. Server certificate verification is requested by default.
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You can override these options by redefining them:
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client => {
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"VerifyCAFile" => "/path/to/custom/file"
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}
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or by deleting them
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client => {
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"VerifyCAFile" => undef
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}
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Adding a test to the test harness
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---------------------------------
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1. Add a new test configuration to `test/ssl-tests`, following the examples of
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existing `*.cnf.in` files (for example, `01-simple.cnf.in`).
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2. Generate the generated `*.cnf` test input file. You can do so by running
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`generate_ssl_tests.pl`:
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$ ./config
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$ cd test
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$ TOP=.. perl -I ../util/perl/ generate_ssl_tests.pl \
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ssl-tests/my.cnf.in default > ssl-tests/my.cnf
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where `my.cnf.in` is your test input file and `default` is the provider to use.
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For all the pre-generated test files you should use the default provider.
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For example, to generate the test cases in `ssl-tests/01-simple.cnf.in`, do
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$ TOP=.. perl -I ../util/perl/ generate_ssl_tests.pl \
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ssl-tests/01-simple.cnf.in default > ssl-tests/01-simple.cnf
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Alternatively (hackish but simple), you can comment out
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unlink glob $tmp_file;
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in `test/recipes/80-test_ssl_new.t` and run
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$ make TESTS=test_ssl_new test
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This will save the generated output in a `*.tmp` file in the build directory.
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3. Update the number of tests planned in `test/recipes/80-test_ssl_new.t`. If
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the test suite has any skip conditions, update those too (see
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`test/recipes/80-test_ssl_new.t` for details).
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Running the tests with the test harness
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---------------------------------------
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HARNESS_VERBOSE=yes make TESTS=test_ssl_new test
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Running a test manually
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-----------------------
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These steps are only needed during development. End users should run `make test`
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or follow the instructions above to run the SSL test suite.
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To run an SSL test manually from the command line, the `TEST_CERTS_DIR`
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environment variable to point to the location of the certs. E.g., from the root
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OpenSSL directory, do
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$ CTLOG_FILE=test/ct/log_list.cnf TEST_CERTS_DIR=test/certs test/ssl_test \
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test/ssl-tests/01-simple.cnf default
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or for shared builds
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$ CTLOG_FILE=test/ct/log_list.cnf TEST_CERTS_DIR=test/certs \
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util/wrap.pl test/ssl_test test/ssl-tests/01-simple.cnf default
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In the above examples, `default` is the provider to use.
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Note that the test expectations sometimes depend on the Configure settings. For
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example, the negotiated protocol depends on the set of available (enabled)
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protocols: a build with `enable-ssl3` has different test expectations than a
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build with `no-ssl3`.
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The Perl test harness automatically generates expected outputs, so users who
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just run `make test` do not need any extra steps.
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However, when running a test manually, keep in mind that the repository version
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of the generated `test/ssl-tests/*.cnf` correspond to expected outputs in with
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the default Configure options. To run `ssl_test` manually from the command line
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in a build with a different configuration, you may need to generate the right
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`*.cnf` file from the `*.cnf.in` input first.
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Running a test manually via make
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--------------------------------
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Individual tests may be run by adding the SSL_TESTS variable to the `make`
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command line. The SSL_TESTS variable is set to the list of input (or ".in")
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files. The values in SSL_TESTS are globbed.
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$ make test TESTS=test_ssl_new SSL_TESTS="0*.cnf.in"
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$ make test TESTS=test_ssl_new SSL_TESTS="01-simple.cnf.in 05-sni.cnf.in"
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